As amusing as they are, some readers question whether or not the texts submitted were actual autocorrect failures. But the site’s founder Jillian Madison insists the texts published on the blog are not fabricated. Damn You Auto Correct features a collection of outrageous auto-corrected text messages submitted by readers.

"It’s the Internet – everyone thinks everything is fake," Madison told Mashable. "If Michelangelo was painting today and had a website, there would be some guy in the comments section screaming, ‘That’s fake!'"

Some of the confusion comes from the fact that auto correct is inherently inconsistent – what auto corrects for one user differs from another, depending on the words they've typed already.

“The bottom line is that auto correct is a mysterious beast,” Madison said. “No one knows exactly how it works. What we do know is that it behaves differently on everyone’s phone and it ‘learns’ words based on things you have typed in the past. You may not be able to recreate something on your phone, but it doesn't mean it didn't happen to someone.”

Still, Madison noted there is no way to prove that all Damn You Auto Correct submissions are real.

"Have I seen my iPhone do some absolutely ridiculous things that make no sense? Yes. There are billions of texts sent every week, so we know there are funny things happening everywhere with auto correct," Madison said. "In this case, I think less skepticism and more laughing is a good thing."

This isn’t the first time published texts have been met with criticism. The Smoking Gun recently reported that the wildly popular Tumblr blog Texts from Bennett — which went viral last week — is fabricated by its site owner, 30-year-old rapper named David Sheldon also known as "Mac Lethal." Texts from Bennett features text messages sent to Sheldon from his 17-year-old cousin Bennett.

"He is a white boy that thinks he’s a crip, works at Amoco, has a girlfriend named Mercedes and is one of the most unintentionally funny and brilliant souls on the planet," according to the site. "By the way, this blog is 100% real."

Sheldon – who has had a few brushes with YouTube fame over the past few weeks– argues that the blog is indeed real, and he refuses to give out Bennett’s real name and contact information to protect his identity.

Some critics believe that text messages can be created by sites such as FakeiPhoneText.com, which allows users to type in text they want displayed on a fictional iPhone screen shot. Then again, it would be just as easy to fake a text message exchange if your friend is in on the joke.

Check out our gallery below — it contains seven hilarious texts from Damn You Auto Correct, and one we made up ourselves. Can you tell the difference? Warning: Some of the content is not safe for work.

Fake or Real? Find the False Auto-Corrected Texts

Intended: "Richter," not "titty."

Intended: "Angel," not "Asian."

Intended: "Urban," not "turban."

Intended: "Pick," not "oil."

Intended: "Ovaltine," not "murdered."

Intended: "Claus" and "Jesus," not "Maria" and "cheeses."

Intended: "Plop," not "poop."

All texts were taken from Damn You Auto Correct except number four. Did you correctly pick out the fake text? It was created via FakeiPhoneText.com.

Note: The founder of Damn You Auto Correct told Mashable that "come pick me up" is often misplaced with "come oil me up.

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